string(9) "wordpress" The Proptech Funding Rebound Is Real — But More Selective Than Ever | Inman Real Estate News

Quick Read

  • Proptech funding rose to $3.3 billion across 125 deals in Q1 2026, up from $2.01 billion and 114 deals a year earlier, according to CRETI data, driven by a few large financings amid steady early-stage activity.
  • Median deal size fell to $8 million from $8.4 million, indicating disciplined valuations, with the top 10 deals capturing 62 percent ($2.03 billion) of funding, reflecting concentrated capital deployment among leading players.
  • Debt and private equity comprised nearly half of capital in Q1 2026, signaling a more institutionalized capital mix alongside venture funding focused on early innovation and growth equity for scaling platforms.
  • Investment favored sectors with clear revenue potential, such as financial infrastructure, lending, energy, marketplaces and large operational systems; traditional software proptech saw smaller, earlier-stage rounds amid cautious investor sentiment.
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Proptech investment surged to $3.3 billion in Q1 2026, but capital is concentrating in fewer large deals as debt and private equity reshape the funding landscape.

Proptech investment picked up meaningfully in Q1 2026, with total funding climbing to $3.3 billion across 125 deals, up from $2.01 billion across 114 transactions a year earlier, according to new data from the Center for Real Estate Technology & Innovation (CRETI).

But that surge in capital didn’t translate into broader pricing momentum. Median deal size edged down to $8 million from $8.4 million, suggesting valuations remain disciplined.

Activity was defined by a barbell dynamic: a handful of large, later-stage financings capturing a disproportionate share of capital, alongside steady early-stage deal flow. The result is a venture landscape that is growing in aggregate, but tightening in how and where capital gets deployed.

CRETI says three dynamics defined proptech investment in Q1 2026: a disproportionate share of capital flowing into a small number of large transactions, continued discipline in pricing at the early and mid-stage, and an expanding role for non-venture capital structures, including debt and private equity. 

“The real estate tech venture market has been selective,” Ashkán Zandieh, president and head of platform at CRETI, told Inman. “Capital is there, but it’s flowing to a narrow set of companies that can actually perform, regardless of geography.”

Billions flowed, but mostly to the biggest players

While total investment rose sharply year over year, capital deployment was far from evenly distributed.

The top 10 transactions alone accounted for roughly $2.03 billion — about 62 percent of all capital deployed in Q1 2026 — underscoring how much of the quarter’s growth was driven by a concentrated set of large financings rather than a broad-based expansion in deal size across the market.

The quarter’s largest transactions were led by a mix of debt, venture, and private equity financings, highlighting the growing diversity of capital sources in proptech. 

These included Kiavi’s $350 million debt raise, Mews’ $300 million Series D, and Convene’s $230 million debt financing

Terralayr stood out with two separate raises — a $223.2 million venture round and a $189.7 million debt facility — while Property Finder secured $170 million in private equity. Other notable deals included Span’s $163.3 million venture and corporate round, Weaver Services’ $156.1 million venture raise, Roc360’s $150 million private equity investment, and Propy’s $100 million debt financing.

Funding mix shifts as debt and PE gain ground

Q1 2026 also marked a continued broadening in the types of capital flowing into proptech.

Debt accounted for roughly one-third of total investment, with private equity contributing a significant additional share, together making up nearly half of all capital deployed during the quarter. 

The mix points to a more layered and institutionalized capital stack taking shape. Venture funding continues to support early-stage innovation; growth equity fuels platform scaling; debt is increasingly used for asset-backed or revenue-generating models; and private equity targets more mature, operationally intensive businesses.

Early-stage is alive, but leaner

Early-stage investment continued to anchor overall deal activity in the quarter, even though it accounted for a small share of capital. Q1 2026 saw 52 seed and pre-seed transactions — about 42 percent of total deal volume. 

But these deals accounted for just 4 percent of capital deployed, underscoring a market where innovation remains active at the earliest stages even as funding concentrates further up the stack.

The quarter’s largest seed-stage financings highlight continued investor interest in early-stage innovation, led by Zero RFI’s $13.8 million raise, followed by Krane’s $9.0 million and EstateXchange’s $8.4 million

Additional notable rounds included Smart Bricks, which raised $5 million, and Sitegeist, which raised $4.7 million, reflecting a steady pipeline of emerging companies attracting capital despite a more selective funding environment.

How proptech funding dynamics have changed

The comparison with Q1 2025 points to a clear structural shift in how capital is being deployed across proptech. 

A year ago, the market was defined by lower overall investment, a slightly higher median deal size, and a more even distribution of capital across transactions. In contrast, Q1 2026 shows a meaningful increase in aggregate capital deployment alongside a decline in median deal size, reflecting a sharper concentration of funding into fewer large deals. 

The growing presence of debt and private equity further underscores this transition. Together, these changes suggest that while capital has returned to the sector, it is being deployed with greater precision and selectivity.

The money is moving beyond software

The quarter’s largest financings offer a clear view into where investor conviction is strongest. Capital in Q1 2026 was disproportionately directed toward sectors tied to financial infrastructure and lending, energy and electrification systems, transaction platforms and marketplaces, and large-scale operational systems. 

These areas tend to provide greater revenue visibility, clearer paths to scale, and more defensible business models. By contrast, more traditional proptech categories — particularly workflow and SaaS tools — continue to draw investment primarily at earlier stages and in smaller rounds, reflecting a more cautious approach to funding pure software plays.

Email Nick Pipitone

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